Dr Jamie Murray

Lecturer

Research Overview

My current research interests centre on complex systems theories and regulation/law, particularly in relation to the macroprudential regulation of the global financial system. The research interests include: the interconnectedness, complexity, and systemic risk of the global financial system; the post 2008 financial regulation literature and the complexity economics of Arthur and Colander; resilience in the self-organisation of the global financial system and in macroprudential regulation of the financial system; the global financial system and macroprudential regulation as complex adaptive systems and complex evolving systems; the complexity theory of global financial system and macroprudential regulation and theories of regulatory capitalism; the complexity theory of social assemblages and the re-thinking of regulation in social theory, behavioural economics, and institutional innovation.

Current Research

Monograph

Deleuze & Guattari: Emergent Law, Nomikoi Series, Routledge 2013

The monograph provides an extended analysis of the legal theory of the joint work of the philosopher Deleuze and social theorist Guattari. In practice it is a theoretically detailed application of complex systems theory to law, particularly to law’s governance and regulation of global capitalist organisation, and law’s potential for the developing governance and regulation of global ecological sustainability. It builds a detailed analysis of global capitalist organisation centred on banking and financial flows driving corporate and commercial activity and global flows of trade.

Book Review. New Perspectives on Property Law, Obligations and Restitution and New Perspectives on Property Law, Human Rights and the Home Alistair Hudson (ed.) Liverpool Law Review 2005 Vol 26 Issue 1 101-109.